Budleigh Salterton – onshore cable consultation to 5 September 2016 – questions to be answered

Here is the consultation letter and, below it, the maps showing the two possible routes that it might follow onshore.  Also details of where and when representatives of the project will be available for questioning.

Several points spring to mind:

How wide will trenches be?
Will roads need to be closed and, if so, for how long?
How big is the converter station?
Why are some of the cables put in fields, yet others are embedded in roads? Roads particularly affected are the B3178 disrupting Budleigh Salterton, East Budleigh and Colaton Raleigh and the B3184 to the airport, Many other key strategic routes will also be cut across and possibly interrupted, including the A30 and also the railway line.
The two routes out of Budleigh Salterton are very sensitive environmental areas – moleing underground was originally mentioned but seems to have been dropped

The consultation letter (followed by maps of alternative routes included with the letter)

I am writing to invite you to take part a public consultation on proposals to build a 220 kilometre underground and subsea electricity interconnector and converter station which will see power flowing between France, the Channel Island of Alderney, and East Devon.

The FAB Project has the approval of the UK energy regulator Ofgem to build the interconnector, linking the British electricity grid from the existing National Grid substation at Broadclyst to the French grid to help ensure the security of supply to both the UK and the continent. Alderney Renewable Energy (ARE) and Transmission Investment LLP formed a joint venture company, FAB Link, and FAB Link is working with the French grid company RTE – Reseau de Transport d’Electricite – to develop the FAB Project.

The project also intends to take advantage of proposed tidal generators in Alderney to provide reliable, sustainable and low-carbon electricity for consumers on both sides of the Channel, hence the FAB name, which stands for France-Alderney-Britain. It is also our intention to increase competition in electricity markets, cutting prices for consumers.

As shown in the enclosed maps, the cables would come ashore in Britain at Budleigh Salterton and thereafter would run underground between the coast and a new above-ground converter station.

The interconnector cables would run completely underground between the coast and a new above-ground converter station to be built near Exeter International Airport. From the converter station the high-voltage DC electricity transmitted through the interconnector would be converted to or from high-voltage AC current used by the National Grid. Further underground cables would then link up with the grid at Broadclyst. There will be no pylons associated with the FAB Project, and our intention is that we will leave the environment along the route exactly as we found it.

We are holding three public consultation events in East Devon and one public consultation event in Alderney where we will be able to explain our project in more detail. Each of the events is open to the public from 2pm to 8pm. They are:
• Tuesday, 26th July, 2016: Temple Methodist Church Hall, Budleigh Salterton;
• Wednesday, 27th July, 2016: Younghayes Centre, Cranbrook;
• Thursday, 28th July 2016: Woodbury Park Hotel, Woodbury;

The events will provide you with opportunities to express your views on the project. The opinions of all stakeholders will help to inform our proposals for the route of the interconnector and the construction of the converter station before the relevant planning applications are submitted to the relevant authorities at the end of 2016.

If you are not able to attend one of the events, please visit our website to learn more. Copies of the detailed plans, technical reports and environmental appraisals of the onshore and offshore proposals available at the public consultation events will also be available online at http://www.fablink.net from 25th July, and there will be opportunities to express your opinions via the website, phone or by post. The consultation will run until 5th September 2016.

If you do not have access to the internet the information will also be available to view at Budleigh Salterton Library in Station Road, Budleigh Salterton, EX9 6RH, from 25th July to 5th September during normal library opening hours, which are currently 09.30-18.00 on Mondays, 09.30-13.00 on Wednesdays, 09.30-17.30 on Thursdays, and 09.30-13.00 on Fridays and Saturdays. Please note the library is not open on Tuesdays or Sundays.

Route 1

8 x 10 in. (1)

Route 2:

8 x 10 in. (1)

 

Another railway station for Cranbrook?

Just how big is Cranbrook going to be?

Just how are other towns and villages going to benefit from development in the East Devon if Cranbrook gets all the funding?

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/new-east-devon-railway-station-edges-closer/story-29491427-detail/story.html

Cranbrook – “Virtual Town Council Consultation Group”

“VIRTUAL TOWN COUNCIL CONSULTATION GROUP

Do you have something to say, but don’t have the time to attend meetings?

Do you have ideas about how to improve Cranbrook?

Do you have ideas about how you would like to see services provided, changed or improved? …

Then join our Virtual Town Council Consultation Group – which we are setting up in response to residents who have indicated that they would like to be involved in the future of the town but are unable to attend meetings or are unable to become a councillor.

As a member of the Virtual Group we will send you emails asking you for your opinions on a range of topics which will help us and partner organisations make decisions. You decide how often and when you would like to answer.
By becoming a member you will help the Town Council to provide an accessible and responsive service and you will be amongst the first to hear about news and updates.”

If you want to be part of this exciting initiative please email us at clerk@cranbrooktowncouncil.gov.uk. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZjO-2O5Hmj8

But no mention of what happens when the “Virtual Consultation Group” overwhelmingly disagrees with the councillors!

When does a park become an “ecology park”? When it’s in Cranbrook!

“We are currently being consulted on the following planning applications:
16/1007/MRES (access, appearance, landscaping, layout and scale, for the construction of 134 dwellings, highway infrastructure, including highway access from London Road/B3174 and associated landscaping works at the land north of London Road and east of Royal Court)

16/1235/MRES (access, appearance, landscape, layout and scale for the construction of an Ecology Park and drainage basins at the Ecology Park land east of Cranbrook Education Campus)”

The “drainage basin” sounds just a bit ominous – let’s hope the ecology isn’t drained away with its first flood!

“Cranbrook Farm” – a pub!

“Cranbrook’s first pub is on the horizon.

Pub chain Hall & Woodhouse, who operate Topsham’s The Lighter Inn, has handed a licensing request for it to East Devon District Council.

The upcoming pub, currently named Cranbrook Farm, will be situated at the heart of the new community – opposite the Taylor Wimpy site.

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/excitement-at-news-of-cranbrook-s-first-pub/story-29448935-detail/story.html

Well, that’s just about the only farm you will be seeing in Cranbrook! And it will be very handy for the Taylor Wimpey builders.

And it DOES sound good “Delayed a bit, dear, still down at the farm …”.

No lie-in for Cranbrook residents on Saturdays

“BUILDERS’ START TIMES (MORNINGS) – A MESSAGE FROM RICHARD GILMOUR, CRANBROOK CONSORTIUM & INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECT MANAGER:

A resident recently expressed concern about working hours and start times, suggesting we should not start work on Saturdays before 9:30 am, so we thought it would be helpful to clarify the situation. It is that, in Phase 1, we are permitted to start at 7:00 am but have taken the decision not to allow starts before 7:30 am.”

[If residents have any queries relating to this post, please contact Richard via Richard.Gilmour@taylorwimpey.com]

Cranbrook landscaping company goes broke – work ceases

“LANDSCAPING – A MESSAGE FROM RICHARD GILMOUR, CRANBROOK CONSORTIUM & INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECT MANAGER

We need to inform residents that Blakedown, the contractors who have been responsible for landscaping in the County Park and other communal areas, are in administration – so have ceased to provide services to Cranbrook.

The Consortium has, however, held extensive interviews for a suitable replacement and work will recommence soon with areas in Phase 1 taking priority (as landscaping on that side is more established).

If residents have any queries relating to this post, please contact Richard via Richard.Gilmour@taylorwimpey.com”

Cranbrook: Unicorn poop?

Further to our earlier posts about Sustainable Utopian Cranbrook:

Children of St Martin’s Primary School have been creating a new poster design to encourage Cranbrook residents to clean up after their dogs.

Children at the school recently heard from Cranbrook Councillor Karen Jennings at an assembly about the dog fouling around the town. Children were asked if they could help teach adults to be responsible pet owners, to help make Cranbrook a great place to live.”

http://www.exeterandeastdevon.gov.uk/pick-up-the-poop-say-cranbrook-schoolchildren/News-Article/

Flytipping in Utopia (aka Cranbrook)

Cranbrook Town Council Facebook page – not quite Councillor Diviani’s perfect sustainable town (see earlier post)

“LET’S WORK TOGETHER TO STAMP OUT FLY TIPPING

Fly tipping is beginning to be a problem in the Cranbrook area. In a number of recent cases, however, East Devon District Council has been successful in catching the offenders and serving fixed penalties (to cover the clear up costs) which were an average of £150 in each case. Obviously it is in everybody’s interests that we avoid unsightly and potentially hazardous views like this one, so please click for information about what to do if you see incidents of fly tipping or need advice on how to dispose of your rubbish responsibly.”

Cranbrook Development Plan, neighbourhood plans and fairy dust …

Owl rarely sleeps and decided accordingly to look at the DMC agenda for 31 May:

Click to access 310516-combined-eo-dmc-agenda.pdf

Owl was particularly interested to see what EDDC has planned for Cranbrook, and for its growth from its present 1250 houses to 8000 by 2031.

A few points came up on reading the “Cranbrook Development Plan: Issues and Options Report, May 2016”.

· Page 21 mentions the need to deliver confidence for stakeholders, which basically means developers. (DMC papers are open about Cranbrook needing to succeed if the Local Plan is not to fail; and at present EDDC is sitting on planning approaches from developers for 4260 houses. And yes, none of us can afford for either the town or the LP to fail – going back to the EDDC drawing board is not an option).

· Page 24 notes that “A number of Neighbourhood Plans are being prepared by the communities around Cranbrook. The District Council is working with these communities to ensure that they develop plans for their future that build on the opportunity presented by Cranbrook.”

No pressure, then – Owl would be very worried if Neighbourhood Plans had to be revised just to suit Cranbrook.

· Page 34: “People are excited by Cranbrook because they want to know what it means to be in a ‘Sustainable New Town’. Looking and feeling like any other new development is not enough”.

Really? The papers for DMC admit that 57% of Cranbrook residents don’t think they know enough about what is being planned! And, unfortunately, Cranbrook already looks and feels like every other similar development in the country. And as for sustainable – well, they had to drop the eco from eco-town, which says it all.

· Page 35: the section entitled ‘Vision’ confirms Owl’s long-held suspicion that Councillor Diviani, who has given his name to the Foreword, may have been overindulging in happy-making recreational substances – perhaps at the Deer Park hotel:

– “What is it like to live in a healthy, happy town? It is where you are able to socialise and know your neighbours, have ready access to a rewarding career on your doorstep, enjoy good health and feel safe … When you travel down your street to work you meet and chat with your neighbours along the way. Spaces along streets are welcoming, inviting you to pause on your journey …”

– … “It is where you live in complete peace and harmony with your fellow-man, in a Utopian dream and where where fairy-dust is sprinkled over the rooftops by flying unicorns and which also teach the world to sing in perfect harmony …”.

Actually Owl made that last bit up, but it could just as easily have been in this vacuous passage.

Incidentally, on page 23 it says that anyone can comment on the Plan. Many may wish to do so.

Owl’s alternative East Devon countryside calendar Part 1: January – March

East Devon District Council has announced the 12 photographs that will make up its Countryside Calendar.  Owl had a competition for an alternative East Devon Countryside Calendar.  Here are the first three winning entries.

Our first three months – January, February and March are devoted to Cranbrook for which we received many entries.   Originally called an eco-town, the eco part of it was dropped last year for some reason.

 

cranbrook03

January – Cranbrook takes shape

 

image

February – Cranbrook “shaped”

 

image

March – Quite a  few things went wrong …

April – December to follow

Difficult times if you are young in Cranbrook

Cranbrook has three times the average number of 0-4 year olds compared to places with a similar population and above average numbers for ages 5-14 and double the average for 25-34 year olds.

There is little funding available for all these age groups, particularly teenagers. Residents are doing their best to provide appropriate activities with little financial or other help, though there seem to be many ” partnership” meetings which, as yet, have had little impact.

Source: current e-edition, Cranbrook Herald, page 16

Rush to avoid Community Infrastructure Levy?

According to Official Notices in the press, Community Infrastructure Levy will become payable to EDDC from 1 September 2016. This is charged per square metre and is in bands with Cranbrook being lowest and Sidmouth being highest.

Should we expect a rush to get planning permissions past the Development Management Committee before 31 August? Would this explain why Bovis is rushing through its application for phase 2 of its Seaton development where it wants zero affordable housing? Will we see the Pegasuslife Knowle application done and dusted before the end of August too?

Cutting taxes and giving generous tax breaks doesn’t increase growth

This is what can happen if “growth” is your only objective and these are the solutions being touted by our LEP for our local Growth Point.

“After he became Kansas governor in 2011, Sam Brownback slashed personal income taxes on the promise that the deep cuts would trigger a furious wave of hiring and expansion by businesses.

But the “shot of adrenaline” hasn’t worked as envisioned, and the state budget has been in crisis ever since. Now many of the same Republicans who helped pass Brownback’s plan are in open revolt, refusing to help the governor cut spending so he can avoid rolling back any of his signature tax measures.

If Brownback won’t reconsider any of the tax cuts, they say, he will have to figure out for himself how to balance the budget in the face of disappointing revenue.

The governor argued that Kansas had to attract more businesses after a “lost decade” in the early 2000s, when private sector employment declined more than 4 percent.
The predicted job growth from business expansions hasn’t happened, leaving the state persistently short of money. Since November, tax collections have fallen about $81 million, or 1.9 percent below the current forecast’s predictions.
“We’re growing weary,” said Senate President Susan Wagle, a conservative Republican from Wichita. While GOP legislators still support low income taxes, “we’d prefer to see some real solutions coming from the governor’s office,” she said.
Last month, Brownback ordered $17 million in immediate reductions to universities and earlier this month delayed $93 million in contributions to pensions for school teachers and community college employees. The state has also siphoned off more than $750 million from highway projects to other parts of the budget over the past two years.
Lawmakers are worried about approving any further reductions in an election year. All 40 Senate seats and 125 House seats are on the ballot in November.
Democrats have long described Brownback’s tax cuts as reckless. Republican critics want to repeal the personal income tax break for farmers and business owners to raise an additional $200 million to $250 million a year.
Debate over the next budget will intensify after lawmakers return from a recess later this month. They could follow through on their threat by adjourning without making specific reductions and leaving the governor with the authority to do so. He faces fewer repercussions because he will not appear on the ballot again before leaving office in January 2019.
Brownback rejected earlier calls to scale back the tax cuts and shows no signs of backing down.
He declined to be interviewed about the lawmakers’ unusual demand until new revenue projections are released Wednesday. Spokeswoman Eileen Hawley said the governor will release proposals afterward for balancing the budget, but, “a plan to raise taxes on small businesses or anyone else will not be among them.”
Brownback blames the economic sluggishness — the state ranked 43rd in total personal income growth in 2015 — on slumps in agriculture, energy production and aircraft manufacturing.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-3547141/In-Kansas-lawmakers-lose-patience-governors-tax-cuts.html

Tonight’ Cabinet 5.30 pm – a humdinger?

Relocation … devolution … Cranbrook …

Fireworks? Red faces? Mumbling? Bumbling? Anything could happen …

Agenda here:

Click to access 060416-combined-cabinet-agendasm.pdf

“Healthy Cranbrook”? Not for some stressed residents

Exchange of views in town council website after a quiet, green space is suddenly changed into a children’s playpark, when residents were told it would not be built o and would remain a quiet space:

As the EDW correspondent says:
When developers lie about green spaces/parks? So much for wellbeing and health?

COMMENTS (only names of residents removed)

“Brilliant, I can’t wait to have this right outside my house (NOT!!) has anyone thought about the people that live in Hayes square??

I’m great full (sic) that we will be moving soon, will be crazy in the summer defiantly (sic) when its baby’s bedtime

moving?? I know I am dreading it, it’s gonna be teenager heaven at night!! Not looking forward to it at all

Yep! For sure the park by co op is full of chavy teenagers from 7pm have to get husband out there. I’m glad we won’t be here when it’s finished. I like it how it is

I think it’s the most stupid place to do its basically right outside my house the children have been more than happy playing out there how it its just going to bring more vandalism to the estate xx

I thought it was supposed to be a quiet park? Why have they spent all the time making it like it is if they are now changing it?

Sorry residents feel like that, also fully understand. Time for parents to stand up and make sure we and our kids do not make an amazing asset into a nightmare for those living nearby. This goes for existing park too.

Shame developers have to lie to sell houses, we were told that was going to be a nice green area where you could just go and sit and relax and read a book, never any mention of a kids play park, why do they need another one so close to the one they already have!

We got told the same.”

Not healthy to have all these people stressed, EDDC!

“Healthy” Cranbrook, no allotments – developers heel-dragging

Town Council website:

11 March at 14:05 ·
ALLOTMENTS
In response to a resident’s query, here is a summary of the position in relation to allotments in Cranbrook:
Allotments were originally proposed within the Ingrams land application (14/2137/MRES), however, the allotments have since been removed from the scheme as the location did not work so close to the sports pitches. This prompted the current renegotiation of the legal agreement. A revised agreement will still make provision for allotments in Cranbrook. Until an…y revisions to the legal agreement are finalised we are unable to give a definite timeline as to when the allotments will be laid out and completed. Allotments are supposed to be complete prior to the first occupation of 1700 dwellings.
There is still a requirement for allotments in Cranbrook and provision has been (and will continue to be) made in the legal agreement to ensure allotments come forward, but at this stage with no allotments yet approved or available, there is no mechanism for residents to be able to apply for a plot.
See more

· Reply · 11 March at 16:03

I gave up my allotment in Exmouth when I moved here in 2014 because I was told one would be available to me here. This is still not the case, yet this is supposed to be a town that is promoted as healthy and sustainable. I’m actually really cross about it. My inability to grow food here has caused a significant rise in the cost of feeding my family, and the local shop has very poor healthy options for food. The local growers who sell at the market are expensive and not selling what my family need. I can’t even grow food in my garden because the ground is so poor that the grass won’t even grow and greenhouses add to the rat problem. To say that they will be added at some point is not acceptable. I moved here based on a series of assurances about services and infrastructure that have now all become lies.”

“Heathy” towns

A correspondent writes:

“Readers of this blog may like to know the details of the Health Initiative that the NHS and EDDC have come up with to enrol Cranbrook as one of the ten new healthy towns.

It’s this: “Cranbrook will look at how healthy lifestyles can be taught in schools”

No surprise Simon Jenkins made the comment, in the article quoted in the earlier blog, that the boss of the NHS might have lost the plot.

Makes you wonder how much time and effort went into cooking this one up?

For information the other towns are:

Darlington, Co Durham
Whitehill and Bordon, Hampshire
Whyndyke Farm, Fylde, Lancashire
Halton Lea, Runcorn, Cheshire
Northstowe, Cambridgeshire
Bicester, Oxfordshire
Barton Park, Oxfordshire
Barking Riverside, London
Ebbsfleet Garden City, Kent”

Shouldn’t all villages, towns and cities be heathy?

Owl could not bear to give vital oxygen to EDDC’s puff job about working with the NHS to make Cranbrook a “healthy town” which seemed to be closing the stable door after the healthy horse had bolted. It just seems an excuse for more committees reporting to more committees to keep themselves in expenses.

However, Owl IS happy to provide oxygen to this response:

Healthy towns alone won’t cure the ills of urban planning”
[Ten new towns are planned and one of these is Cranbrook]
Simon Jenkins, Guardian

“The strain of running the NHS is clearly getting to its boss, Simon Stevens. With daily headlines of woe perhaps it is understandable that he should have lost the plot. Stevens has given his imprimatur to the phoney “garden city” movement, by redubbing its estates “healthy towns” and offering to send in his apparatchiks.

Towns, designed to address problems such as obesity and dementia, will have 76,000 new homes and 170,000 residents.

Fantasy answers to the ills of modern life are as old as Thomas More’s Utopia. England’s first official garden city, Letchworth, was born in 1903 as the result of a book – always a bad sign. It was Ebenezer Howard’s To-Morrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform. Its slogan, “health and efficiency” was adopted by early nudist magazines.

Letchworth was wonderfully bonkers. It was a “cottagey” settlement of teetotalism, co-education, poetry evenings, book-binding, embroidery and sandal-making. The nonalcoholic pub, The Skittles, served Cydrax, Bovril and adult education. It was advertised as “a meeting place for striking workers”. It sounds just the place for today’s junior doctors.

Adding the word healthy to a property may help sales – as in the Vale of Health in Hampstead – but no one can control who lives in these places over time. Letchworth’s builder, Raymond Unwin, soon escaped to Hampstead and the residents cried out for booze, and got it. Like their contemporaries they sprawled over rural Hertfordshire, heavily dependent on cars.

Stevens has updated the spirit of Letchworth to hipster digital. His garden towns will be run by “Wi-Fi carers”, Skyping GPs and an internet of things. There will be “dementia-friendly” streets, fast-food-free zones, and a “designed-out obesogenic environment”.

This sounds like a brave new world.

Today the phrase garden city has become a euphemism for building in the green belt. It is laundered planning. The most recent such city, Milton Keynes, is shockingly wasteful of land and infrastructure. One of Stevens’ 10 proposed sites is our old friend George Osborne’s Ebbsfleet. It is a not a garden city but a 10-year-old failed housing estate in north Kent. People do not want to live there – even in flats priced at £150,000.

The idea that any of this has to do with the so-called housing crisis is absurd. Stevens’ new towns are mostly development sites where builders can gain the highest profit: on green land round London, Oxford and Cambridge, and in Hampshire and Cheshire. Since the developers will have to pay for them up front, they will be calling the tunes. We know the result: more sprawl.

Housing policy at present is driven by one interest group alone, the out-of-town speculative house-builders. They are in the business of new build, and have brilliantly engineered themselves one Osborne house-buying subsidy after another.

New build comprises barely 10% of property transactions, less in cities. There is no evidence that house prices reflect the rate of new building. They chiefly reflect the cost of money, which in Britain has never been cheaper. That is why prices continue to rise, despite the hysteria.
London’s biggest housing handicap is simple. It has one of the lowest housing densities of any big world city, a quarter that of Paris. This density is what conceals London’s true housing reserve, its empty rooms, empty flats, vacancies above shops, wasted airspace above low-rise dwellings. It is what imposes a near intolerable burden on commuter transport, which out-of-town housing will exacerbate.

The job of policy should be to encourage surplus space on to the market. Yet at present every single housing policy works in the opposite direction.
Density should be encouraged by increasing council tax, not suppressing it. Downsizing should be encouraged by lowering stamp duty, not raising it. Planning should encourage extra floors on low-rise houses.

Ever more Londoners are renting not buying, as in Berlin. Yet buy-to-let – which should be encouraged, to drive down rents – is penalised, and will thus drive them up.

As housing charity Shelter turns 50, the country is still plagued by overcrowding, rogue landlords, insecure tenancies and homelessness. How do we even begin to make things better?

It is modern cities, not Stevens’ countryside, that are truly green, efficient, potentially healthy places. He should read the American environmentalist Ed Glaeser, who points out that the greenest Americans live in Manhattan. They walk a lot, share energy and live in easy reach of jobs, shops and services. “Those who move out to leafy, low-density suburbs,” he says, “leave a significantly deeper carbon footprint than Americans who live cheek by jowl.”

The NHS should campaign to make the city healthy, not a few privileged out-of-towners. Stevens should demand a slash in urban pollution. He should plant trees, build proper streets where walking and shopping are safe and children can play, instead of today’s lumpy, glass-bound boxes. He should read Jane Jacobs on “defensible space”, on what makes modern cities livable (streets), and what kills them (estates).

The government’s role in housing should be to remove obstacles to the market for everyone, but to spend money only on the genuinely poor. The obsession with “affordable housing” – a new house at 80% of market price – may please Tory voters but it merely drives up house prices. Public money should go to those in need of hostels and special units, of which London is chronically short.”

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/mar/02/healthy-towns-wellness-communities-urban-planning

Local GPs cannot cope with influx of new residents from new estates

” … Pinhoe and Broadclyst Medical Practice have been experiencing increasing pressure on their list from Cranbrook.

Pinhoe also have two additional big housing schemes at Monkerton and West Clyst, and there is also talk of a new nursing home being built opposite West Clyst.

Practice manager Andy Potter said: “Our practice list has grown significantly in the last few years. Our list at the end of last week was up to 11,150. Compared with this time a couple of years ago it was 1,000 less than that.

“We have taken on additional medical manpower so we have taken on a half time GP and we have additional nursing staff.

“Primarily, I would have to say the main factor in our growth so far has been the establishment of Cranbrook new town.” …

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/GP-surgeries-Exeter-East-Devon-feel-pressure-new/story-28835494-detail/story.html